Colonel Roy C. Kirtland, Air Corps, who was recently detailed for duty in the Inspector General's
Department, Washington, D.C., was born at Fort Benton, Montana, May 14, 1874, and was educated in the public schools of Denver,
Colo., and Washington, D.C.
Enlisting in the Army on November 8, 1898, he saw service as Private, Corporal and Sergeant,
Company M, and Battalion Sergeant Major, 7th Infrantry, to August 29, 1901. He was then commissioned a second lieutenant of
Infantry and served continuously with this branch of the service until March, 1911, in the meantime being promoted to 1st Lieutenant,
May 18, 1905.
To read the complete biography, click on:

8. In June of 1912, Capt. Charles D. Chandler and Lt. Roy Kirtland went aloft in a Wright B airplane with a Lewis machine gun and
fired it, making it the first machine gun to sprout wings and fly.

****The following is a hand written note on the back of the accompanying photo.

First machine Gun fired from a plane. Back on June 7, 1912, Col. Isaac M. Lewis, the inventor of the Lewis Machine Gun, took one of
his first sample guns to College Park Maryland and asked that it be fired from an airplane. The Commanding Officer of the U.S. Army
flying school there Capt. C. de F. Chandler agreed to undertake the flying experiment and he went aloft with his pilot Lt. Roy T. Kirkland
in a Wright B Plane.

(unsigned)

Collection of Richard W. Bowler Lt. Col. USAF (Ret), 9-20-07

KIRTLAND AIR FORCE BASE, NEW MEXICO

"Kirtland Air Force Base is named after Colonel Roy Carrington Kirtland, the third oldest military pilot in
the US Army at the time of his death in 1941. He played a prominent role in the early Air Corps and in aviation history.".

ONLINE RESOURCES

If you search for "Roy C. Kirtland", using the Google search engine, (9-21-07), you will
find about 139 links. Most of them only offer brief and repetitious references to his life and career. Most commonly you will read the
sentence, "The base was named for Colonel Roy C. Kirtland, a military aviation pioneer who learned to fly with the Wright brothers."
However, if you visit each of the sites, and search for "Kirtland." you can assemble at least a minimal biography of his career.
This is an increase of about 100 links since 2003. An especially valuable one is cited immediately below.